[1] “History of Delafield WI,” Hawks Inn, accessed February 25, 2013.
[2] “Writings of Nelson P. Hawks,” Hawks Inn, accessed July 7, 2016.
[3] Milton J. Bates, “The Mill on the Bark: Despite the Ravages of Fire and Time, Nelson P. Hawks’s Old Mill Survives Intact,” Wisconsin Magazine of History, Summer, 2001, 7.
[1] “Fortieth Anniversary of the Newhall House Horror,” The Milwaukee Journal. January 7, 1923; Joseph J. Korom Jr., Look Up Milwaukee: Eastside/Westside All Around Downtown: A Descriptive and Pictorial Display of Selected Architectural Scenery (Milwaukee, WI: Franklin Publishers, 1979), 143.
[2] “Century’s Deadliest Fire,” The Milwaukee Sentinel, October 1, 1987; “Newhall House
[1] Other cities were Chicago and Detroit. See “Plan Undisclosed Number of Sites in the Milwaukee, Nearby Area,” Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, October 9, 1954, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=67kyAAAAIBAJ&sjid=3A8EAAAAIBAJ&dq=undisclosed&pg=4980%2C6206631, accessed January 15, 2013.
[2] “Council will get Proposal to Lease Maitland Nike Site,”
[1] Frank A. Flower, History of Milwaukee, Wisconsin (Chicago, IL: The Western Historical Co., 1881), 1283, 1285-1289, 1295-1301.
[2] John Gurda, Bay View, Wis. (Milwaukee: Milwaukee Humanities Program, 1979), 12-13; Bernhard C. Korn, The Story of Bay View (Milwaukee: Milwaukee County Historical Society, 1980), 49-55; John Gurda, The Making of Milwaukee
[1] Elmer Becker, A Century of Milwaukee Water: An Historical Account of the Origin and Development of the Milwaukee Water Work (Milwaukee, 1974), 58-59.
[2] Gregory Filardo, ed., Old Milwaukee: A Historic Tour (New York, NY: The Vestal Press, Ltd, 1988), 10; Becker, A Century of Milwaukee Water, 58.
[1] John Gurda, The Quiet Company: A Modern History of Northwestern Mutual Life (Milwaukee: Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance, 1983), 1-4; William George Bruce, History of Milwaukee, City and County, vol. 1 (Chicago, IL: S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1922), 369.
[1] Rasmus Björn Anderson, The First Chapter of Norwegian Immigration, 1821-1840, Its Causes and Results (Madison: Rasmus B. Anderson, 1895), 273-274, 313-314; Leola Nelson Bermann, Americans from Norway (Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Company, 1950), 70; U.S. Bureau of the Census, Birthplace–Norway, 1840, tabulated at http://www.ipums.org.
[1] H. Russell Austin, The Milwaukee Story: The Making of an American City (Milwaukee: The Milwaukee Journal, 1946), 115.
[2] Frank Flowers, The History of Milwaukee, Wisconsin: From Pre-historic Times to the Present Date (Chicago: The Western Historical Co., 1881), 145; Milwaukee County Old Settlers’ Club: Its Origin, Purpose and Aims; Amendments to
[1] Steven M. Avella, In the Richness of the Earth: A History of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, 1843-1958 (Milwaukee, WI: Marquette University Press, 2002), pp. 63, 64, 68, 69, 71, 72, and 106.
[1] Chris Foran, “Milwaukee’s 1st St. Patrick’s Day Parade Had Tangled Motives,” Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, March 10, 2016, last accessed September 28, 2017.
[2] “The Industrial Parade,” Milwaukee Daily Sentinel, June 21, 1898, 8, Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers; “Milwaukee Carnival Industrial Parade a Good Thing,” Milwaukee Daily Sentinel, March 17, 1898, Nineteenth Century U.
[1] Sarah Filzen, “The Rise and Fall of Paramount Records,” Wisconsin Magazine of History, 82, no. 2 (Winter 1998-99): 104-127.
[2] Filzen, “The Rise and Fall of Paramount Records,” 109. The Chair Company, which had branched out to make phonographs, sought to produce its own records as a promotional tool to increase phonograph sales. New
[1] Christian Wahl, “Public Park System in the City,” in History of Milwaukee County from its First Settlement to the Year 1895, vol. 1, ed. H. Louis Conrad (Chicago and New York: American Biographical Publishing Co., 1895), 300-306.
[1] Johan Galtung, Sixty Speeches on War and Peace (Oslo: International Peace Research Institute, 1988). See also Jacqueline Haessly, “Defining Peace as Absence” and “Defining Peace as Presence” in Weaving a Culture of Peace (Milwaukee: Peace Talk Publications, 2001), which offers a comprehensive review of existing literature on these two definitions of peace.
[1] See “Peace Education Theory,” accessed June 1, 2017, for an examination about theories and practices related to peace education. For a selective history of Peace Education and Peace Studies in Wisconsin, see Ian Harris, Dick Ringler, Kent Shifferd, and William Skelton, “History of the Wisconsin Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies,” Journal for the Study
[1] Grant Wacker, “Pentecostalism,” in Encyclopedia of the American Religious Experience: Studies of Traditions and Movement, ed. Charles H. Lippy and Peter W. Williams (New York, NY: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1988), 938.
[2] Wacker, “Pentecostalism,” 933-934, 938.
[3] Grant A. Wacker, “Travail of a Broken Family: Radical Evangelical Responses to the Emergence of
[1] Amy Silvers, Katherine M. Skiba, and Tom Held, “Lloyd Pettit 1927-2003.” Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, November 12, 2003; “History,” About Us, Pettit National Ice Center, last accessed June 8, 2016.
[2] “History,” About Us, Pettit National Ice Center, last accessed June 8, 2016.
[3] Silvers, Skiba, and Held, “Lloyd Pettit 1927-2003.”